1
Abbotsford Drive
Looking towards the City Centre, with the Victoria Centre flats on the skyline. This road was created from scratch as part of the St Anns redevelopment of the 1970s and is a main feeder road for the area.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 8 Mar 2009
0.09 miles
2
Chasewood baptist Church
Not recognised on the 1:50000 map, although it does feature on the 1:25000
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 8 Mar 2009
0.12 miles
3
Watson Fothergill's Woodborough Road Baptist Church
The church is now an Islamic Centre. Built in bright Nottingham Patent Brick in a characteristically idiosyncratic Romanesque style, it is Grade II listed: http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-459123-woodborough-road-islamic-social-centre-#.VZUQViiwHZY
For more about Fothergill, and photographs of his buildings, see http://www.geograph.org.uk/article/The-Buildings-of-Watson-Fothergill .
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 1 Jul 2015
0.13 miles
4
Nottingham - NG3
The former Woodborough Road Baptist Church (now a Pakistani cultural centre) as seen from Alfred Street Central. The recreational facilities on the right-hand side of the picture belong to Huntingdon Roman Catholic Primary School.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 21 Apr 2012
0.13 miles
5
Chasewood Baptist Church
An uninspiring modern building, looking much as it did eleven years ago
Image
Image: © Stephen Craven
Taken: 18 Jan 2020
0.13 miles
6
Woodborough Road Baptist Church
The work of Watson Fothergill. I have given it its original name in the title, it is now The Pakistan Centre. It was completed in 1893 and listed Grade II in 1978.
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 2 Mar 2010
0.13 miles
7
Woodborough Road Baptist Church
The work of Watson Fothergill. I have given it its original name in the title, it is now The Pakistan Centre. It was completed in 1893 and listed Grade II in 1978.
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 2 Mar 2010
0.13 miles
8
Nottingham - NG3
The lower end (i.e the city centre end) of Woodborough Road (B684). This new medium-sized housing estate, completed at the end of 2011, lies immediately beyond the ex-Woodborough Road Baptist Church on the left of this picture. The ex-church now houses a Pakistani cultural centre. No.237 Woodborough Road, a house that used to exist on this stretch of road, was one of Arthur Mee's many homes. Mee (1875-1943), the second of ten children, moved here in 1889 when he was 14 yrs old. He matured into a prolific writer and is perhaps most famous for writing and editing the serialised publications "The Children's Encyclopaedia" and "The Children's Newspaper", although he was also highly regarded as journalist and editor within the London-based newspaper industry. He died in Eynsford, Kent in 1943.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 21 Apr 2012
0.13 miles
9
Funky new living space
It appears that this 1960s apartment block is being demolished. The poster promotes new properties that are to built in its place.
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 2 Mar 2010
0.13 miles
10
Entrance to The Pakistan Centre
Formerly the Woodborough Road Baptist Church, completed in 1893 and listed Grade II in 1978. The work of Watson Fothergill http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watson_Fothergill .
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 2 Mar 2010
0.14 miles